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In a message dated 2/5/2005 2:03:39 A.M. Central Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
writes:
>Also in "Iraq rebuilds, with a little US help" he started with "A
ceasefire agreement between Iraq and Iran was signed on August 20, 1988. Iraq
then rebuilt its military capability with bank credits and technology from
Western Europe and the United States, financed mostly by Saudi Arabia." Now that
is a selective periodisation and an utter lack of knowledge of Iraqi history.
there is a discontinuity that is not supported by fact.. Some would say that the
US and the Gulf turned against Saddam because he ended the war with Iran.
Imperialism was very cozy with the ongoing conflict and the stubbornness of the
Mullahs of Iran because that usurped the wealth of the region. but that is one
point.. what is more relevant is to trace historical development back to 1958
when Iraq moved into a soviet orbit. that is a change worth contemplating and
where events fall better in place..<
Comment
Henry C.K. recent article to the Asia Times contains its own self contained
framework, which in my opinion, is clearly spelt out. From the standpoint of the
Bush administration, the war against the people in Iraq is not a war against the
people of Iraq but a humanitarian act, with collateral damage, to further
freedom, justice and the American way. At any rate, this is what is told to the
peoples of America concerning America's imperial policy.
The concept of "failed states" is not Henry's conception of the world but
rather an examination of "failed states" as ideological proclamation, political
and economic policy put forth by imperial authority.
In respects to America, China and the Soviets Henry states:
>>Toward the end of the Cold War, conflicting geopolitical state
interests were overwhelming ideology disputes, driving communist China toward
strategic convergence with the capitalist US against Soviet imperialism, in
response to the Soviet alliance with anti-communist India against China.
Localized ongoing superpower ideological wars by proxy states were wound down
and local political struggles were frozen to avoid superpower conflict
escalating into nuclear exchanges.<<
Further, when Henry states:
>In former Yugoslavia, a former Soviet bloc state, ethnic strife has
embroiled NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) members, primarily the US,
in humanitarian intervention.<
. . . I understood this to be a description of how imperial America
views itself and its policy, rather than a personal profession of ones political
and ideological beliefs. The Clinton administration painted its goal and
intervention in Yugoslavia as an act of humanitarian aid.
Melvin P.
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